If you're dragging around a bad credit score, you'll pay more for car
loans, credit cards and mortgages. Here's how to turn it around in a
hurry. Plus: 4 credit snafus to avoid.
By
Liz
Pulliam Weston
So you’ve had a few problems getting the bills
paid lately, and you’re wondering what you can do to repair the damage.
You’ve got plenty of company. There are more than 30 million people in
the United States with credit blemishes severe enough (and credit scores
under 620) to make obtaining loans and credit cards with reasonable
terms difficult.
Or maybe your credit is OK, but you'd like to make it better. After all,
the better your credit, the lower the interest rates you can secure on
mortgages, car loans and credit cards.
Know the score
In order to improve your credit score, it's important to know where you
stand currently. Despite all the media attention given to free credit
reports, you still have to pay to find out your credit score, the
three-digit number ranging from 300 to 850 that is the key to your
borrowing costs. You can obtain your FICO credit scores, the ones
lenders use, from
MyFico.com. Or you can get Experian's "consumer education" version
here.
Now you're ready to take the seven steps to speedy credit repair:
1) Pay down your credit cards. Paying off your installment loans
(mortgage, auto, student, etc.) can help your score, but typically not
as dramatically as paying down -- or paying off -- revolving accounts
like credit cards.
The credit-scoring formulas like to see a nice, big gap between the
amount of credit you're using and your available credit limits. Getting
your balances below 30% of the credit limit on each card can really
help.
While most debt gurus recommend paying off the highest-rate card first,
a better strategy here is to pay down the cards that are closest to
their limits.
2) Use your cards lightly. Racking up big balances can hurt your
score, regardless of whether you pay your bill in full each month.
What's typically reported to the credit bureaus, and thus calculated
into your score, is the balance reported on your last statement. (That
doesn't mean paying off your balances each month isn't financially smart
-- it is -- just that the credit score doesn't care.)
You typically can increase your score by limiting your charges to 30% or
less of a card's limit. If you're having trouble keeping track, consider
using a check register to track your spending, logging into your account
frequently at the issuer's Web site, or using personal finance software
like
Microsoft Money or Quicken, which can download your transactions and
balances automatically.
3) Check your limits. Your score might be artificially depressed
if your lender is showing a lower limit than you've actually got. Most
credit-card issuers will quickly update this information if you ask.
If your issuer makes it a policy not to report consumers' limits,
however -- as is the usual case with American Express cards and those
issued by Capital One -- the bureaus typically use your highest balance
as a proxy for your credit limit.
You may see the problem here: If you consistently charge the same amount
each month -- say $2,000 to $2,500 -- it may look to the credit-scoring
formula like you're regularly maxing out that card.
You could go on a wild spending spree to raise the limit, but a more
sober solution would simply be to pay your balance down or off before
your statement period closes. Check your last statement to see which day
of the month that typically is, then go to the issuer's Web site about a
week in advance of closing and pay off what you owe. It won't raise your
reported limit, but it will widen the gap between that limit and your
closing balance, which should boost your score.
4) Dust off an old card. The older your credit history, the
better. But if you stop using your oldest cards, the issuers may stop
updating those accounts at the credit bureaus. The accounts will still
appear, but they won't be given as much weight in the credit-scoring
formula as your active accounts, said Craig Watts, an executive at Fair
Isaac & Co., one of the leading credit scorers. That's why Ferguson
often recommends to her clients that they use their oldest cards every
few months to charge a small amount, paying it off in full when the
statement arrives.
5) Get some goodwill. If you've been a good customer, a lender
might agree to simply erase that one late payment from your credit
history. You usually have to make the request in writing, and your
chances for a "goodwill adjustment" improve the better your record with
the company (and the better your credit in general). But it can't hurt
to ask.
A longer-term solution for more-troubled accounts is to ask that they be
"re-aged." If the account is still open, the lender might erase previous
delinquencies if you make a series of 12 or so on-time payments. For
more on re-aging, see "A
fresh start on credit -- without bankruptcy."
6) Dispute old negatives. Say that fight with your phone company
over an unfair bill a few years ago resulted in a collections account.
You can continue protesting that the charge was unjust, or you can try
disputing the account with the credit bureaus as "not mine." The older
and smaller a collection account, the more likely the collection agency
won't bother to verify it when the credit bureau investigates your
dispute.
Some consumers also have had luck disputing old items with a lender that
has merged with another company, which can leave lender records a real
mess.
7) Blitz significant errors. Your credit score is calculated
based on the information in your credit report, so certain errors there
can really cost you. But not everything that's reported in your file
matters to your score.
Here's the stuff that's usually worth the effort of correcting with the
bureaus:
- Late payments, charge-offs, collections or other negative items
that aren't yours.
- Credit limits reported as lower than they actually are.
- Accounts listed as "settled," "paid derogatory," "paid
charge-off" or anything other than "current" or "paid as agreed" if
you paid on time and in full.
- Accounts that are still listed as unpaid that were included in a
bankruptcy.
- Negative items older than seven years (10 in the case of
bankruptcy) that should have automatically fallen off your report.
You actually have to be a bit careful with this last one, because
sometimes scores actually go down when bad items fall off your
report. It's a quirk in the FICO credit-scoring software, and the
potential effect of eliminating old negative items is difficult to
predict in advance.
Some of the stuff that you typically shouldn't worry about includes:
- Various misspellings of your name.
- Outdated or incorrect address information.
- An old employer listed as current.
- Most inquiries.
If the misspelled name or incorrect address is because of identity theft
or because your file has been mixed with someone else's, that should be
obvious when you look at your accounts. You'll see delinquencies or
accounts that aren't yours and should report that immediately. However,
if it's just a goof by the credit bureau or one of the companies
reporting to it, it's usually not much to sweat about.
Two more items you don't need to correct:
- Accounts you closed listed as being open.
- Accounts you closed that don't say "closed by consumer."
Closing accounts can't help your score, and may hurt it. If your goal is
boosting your score, leave these alone. Once an account has been closed,
though, it doesn't matter to the scoring formulas who did it -- you or
the lender. If you messed up the account, it will be obvious from the
late payments and other derogatory information included in the file.
4 other credit snafus
Other actions to beware when you're trying to improve your score:
- Asking a creditor to lower your credit limits. This will
reduce that all-important gap between your balances and your
available credit, which could hurt your score. If a lender asks you
to close an account or get a limit lowered as a condition for
getting a loan, you might have to do it -- but don't do so without
being asked.
- Making a late payment. The irony here is that a late or
missed payment will hurt a good score more than a bad one, dropping
a 700-plus score by 100 points or more. If you've already got a
string of negative items on your credit report, one more won't have
a big impact, but it's still something you want to avoid if you're
trying to improve your score.
- Consolidating your accounts. Applying for a new account
can ding your score. So, too, can transferring balances from a
high-limit card to a lower-limit one, or concentrating all or most
of your credit-card balances onto a single card. In general, it's
better to have smaller balances on a few cards than a big balance on
one.
- Applying for new credit if you've already got plenty. On
the other hand, applying for and getting an installment loan can
help your score if you don't have any installment accounts, or
you're trying to recover from a credit disaster like bankruptcy.
By the way, all these suggestions work best if you have poor or mediocre
scores to begin with. Once you've hit the 700 mark, any tweaking you do
will tend to have less of a positive impact.
And if your scores are in the "excellent" category, 760 or above, you'll
probably be able to eke out only a few extra points despite your best
efforts. There's really no point, anyway, since you're already qualified
for the best rates and terms. Here's one area where it's really OK to
rest on your laurels and worry about something else.
Liz Pulliam Weston's column appears every Monday and Thursday,
exclusively on MSN Money. She also answers reader questions in the
Your Money message board.
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